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By John MacArthur
Open your Bible, if you will, with me and let's turn to Matthew
chapter 10.. .Matthew chapter 10. As we continue to progress through
the gospel of Matthew and Matthew unfolds to us the majesty of the
King, the Lord Jesus Christ, we find ourselves in chapter 10 getting
acquainted with the disciples. By the time we reach the tenth
chapter of Matthew our Lord is now appointing and sending the twelve
to assist Him in the ministry of preaching the Kingdom of God.
You remember as chapter 9 concluded, the Lord looked out over the
multitude, He saw them in their spiritual lostness, their pain,
their frustration, their sorrow. He realized that there were so many
to reach and so few laborers. At that point, in fact, it was Him and
Him alone. And so He asked the disciples to pray at the end of
chapter 9. And then in the opening verse of chapter 10 He called
them to be the answer to their own prayer. And He sent them out to
be His sent-ones, for that is what apostle in verse 2 means. They
started out as disciples, that means learner. They were sent as
Apostles. They became the ambassadors of the King, His
representatives in the world, His laborers to reach and warn the
harvest of coming judgment and of how they could escape by entrance
into His glorious Kingdom.
Now, we've been focusing, then, as we have begun to look at chapter
10, on the training of the twelve. The Lord's methods, techniques,
principles, as He calls, trains, develops, sends out His Apostles.
This in chapter 10 is really their first sending. Their final and
official sending comes after the resurrection and the ascension.
This is a preliminary sending which basically is an internship for
them. They go out but not very far and not alone but rather two by
two. He hovers over them as a mother eagle would hover over eagles
learning to fly. They go out a little while and they come back to
Him, and they learn in the process of field experience. Later to be
sent individually after He has already gone. And they ask the right
questions when they come back and their training becomes more
intense in the months that follow this their internship.
Now as we look at the sending out that occurs in chapter 10 and as
we see if we can't develop the principles of discipleship which our
Lord gives us, we first of all are introduced to the individuals
involved. And if you look at verses 2 through 4 you find the names
of the twelve Apostles: Peter, Andrew, James, John, Philip,
Bartholomew, Thomas, Matthew, James the son of Alphaeus and Lebbaeus
who was also known as Thaddaeus, Simon the Zealot and Judas
Iscariot.
Verse 5 says: "These twelve Jesus sent forth."
Verse 6 says He told them to go to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel.
Verse 7 says that as you go, preach the Kingdom.
So, these were the workers, the associates, the ambassadors of the
King Himself.
Now as we noted last week their leader was Peter. That is why it
says in verse 2 - "The first, Simon who is called Peter." He is not
the first one called. The first one called was John and associated
with him Andrew in that initial encounter in John 1. Peter was not
the first one called. He is first in this sense, it is the same word
used in this statement by Paul. "I am the chief of sinners." It
means the foremost one, the primary one, the chief one. Peter was
the leader. He was the out-front, up- front man. And so last time we
studied Peter and his leadership ability and how the Lord refined
and developed Peter into a leader that was useful.
Now for our study this morning we want to come to the remaining
three in the first group. Remember I told you there are always three
groups in every list of the Apostles. There are four lists, Matthew,
Mark, Luke and Acts, and always in all four lists they're the same
three groups with the same four names in each group. And so we're
looking at group one. And it is the most intimate group. Group two
is the next most intimate and group three is the least intimate of
the twelve. The Lord Himself could not get close to even twelve men,
but He could get close to four and out of the four, particularly
three. And so we're looking at this most intimate group, all came
from the same town, all have the same profession, and all were in
the first group called to Christ.
And we ask ourselves this question, and I want you to keep asking it
as we look at these three names this morning, - What kind of people
can God use? That's the issue. What kind of people can God use in
His ministry? What kind of people can change the world? What kind of
people can preach the gospel of the Kingdom so that souls are saved?
What kind of people does God ordain for His purposes?
Now, usually when we think about Peter, Andrew, James and John we
have that view of stained glass saints. People who are on a
completely different plane than we are. And to make it worse we call
them Saint Paul, and we name cities after them.. .Saint Peter, or
Saint Petersburg, or Saint Andrews which is a city in Scotland, or
Saint James, which is a common name for cities, or Jamestown or
whatever. And do you know that there are more people in the United
States named John than any other name? It's a wonderful name. And
Peter and James and Andrew, we name people after those names with
great respect because these are respected individuals. Cathedrals
are named after these individuals. And we think of these particular
four as something other than ourselves, in a different dimension of
time and space, in another world. They have an aura about them.
Frankly, that's really not the way it ought to be. They are very
common men with a very uncommon calling. But they're very much like
we are. And they demonstrate to us the kind of people God uses. See
if you find yourself among them.
Last time we learned that God uses people like Simon; impulsive,
dynamic, impetuous, strong, initiators, bold who very often talk a
better game than they play, the dynamic kind. Oh, He uses those
kind. But let's meet the second on the list.. .Andrew, his brother,
Andrew, Peter's brother. By the way, his name means manly. He too
was a native of Bethsaida, that little village in Galilee. And he
like his brother was a fisherman. In fact, in Matthew 4 he was down
at the sea when Jesus came along, he had already met Jesus, he had
already believed in Jesus, he had already affirmed Him as the
Messiah, but after going back to his fishing, now the Lord appears
again to him at the shore, and calls him permanently to follow and
He will make him a fisher of men.
Prior to coming to follow Jesus Christ he had been a pious Jew, he
had been a godly Jew, he had been a God- fearing Jew. He had also
been a disciple of John the Baptist. In fact, it was one day at the
message of John the Baptist that his life was changed. For John the
Baptist saw Jesus in John 1 and said: "Behold, the Lamb of God." And
Andrew was there that day, along with John who was also a fisherman
, and surely an acquaintance as well as was James. And he and John
heard John the Baptist say that, and they followed after Jesus
immediately and Jesus turned and said to them, "What seek ye?" And
they replied, "Where do You dwell?" And they went where Jesus dwelt
and they spent the entire day with Him and those hours were the
crisis in their spiritual history. And when they came out of that
day spent with the Lamb of God, immediately it says that Andrew
opened his mouth and said these first words, "We have found the
Messiah." No sooner did Andrew discover the reality of Jesus Christ
for himself, than that he announced to his brother Peter that very
phrase, "We have found the Messiah."
Peter and Andrew lived together, it says in Mark 1:29. And no doubt
they shared everything. And especially did Andrew want to share with
him the Messiah. And so from this very beginning he becomes a part
of that intimate four. In fact, if you study through the New
Testament, it's James and Peter and John and Peter, James and John,
and John and Peter and James, they're always the inner circle and
nobody is ever let into that inner circle except when Andrew gets in
and it's Peter, James, John and Andrew. He was in the most intimate
four but he never quite cracked that inside three.
But he was greatly respected. In fact, Philip who was in group two,
a little less intimate with the Lord, one time had some Greeks come
to him and say - We want to see Jesus. And you know where Philip
took them? He took them to Andrew. Why? Because I guess Philip
thought that if you want to get to Jesus all you've got to do is get
to Andrew. Andrew was intimate with Jesus. And Andrew was respected.
And even yet he isn't in the inner three. But all of a sudden in the
fourth gospel, the gospel of John, Andrew begins to emerge from the
background. And we see Andrew three times in the gospel of John. And
all three times Andrew is doing the same thing. It's easy to
characterize him.
The first time is in John chapter 1 verse 40 which I just reported
to you. It says in John 1:40; "One of the two who heard John the
Baptist speak," and that would be John and Andrew, "followed Him and
he was Andrew, Simon Peter's brother." And by the way, Andrew is
always called Simon Peter's brother with, I think, one or two
exceptions, maybe just one. That's always how he's identified. "And
he first findeth his own brother Simon, and saith unto him, We have
found the Messiah," which is being interpreted the Christ, the
anointed one, "and he brought him to Jesus."
Now if you want to know how to characterize the life of Andrew it's
very simple, he is the one who was always bringing people to Jesus.
The second time we see him is in the sixth chapter of John and the
eighth and ninth verse. A vast multitude of people are gathered,
Jesus is teaching, it's late in the day, the crowd is hungry.
There's not enough food and Andrew brings to Jesus this time a
little boy. And the little boy has five loaves and two fish. It
doesn't mean five big loaves of bread, it means five little flat
barley crackers and two fish. And they would take those fish and
they would pickle them and then they would eat them with the
crackers. So he brought a little fellow with five barley crackers
and two pickled fish. He brought him to Jesus. I guess Andrew must
have thought the Lord could make a whole lot out of a very little.
The third time we meet him is in John 12. And I've already alluded
to that incident. And in John chapter 12 and verse 20 Philip is
approached by the Greeks, or the Gentiles, and they want to see
Jesus. And Philip tells Andrew and together they went to Jesus. The
assumption being that they took the folks there too.
And so, whenever you see Andrew he is involved in finding Jesus so
that Jesus can meet someone, bringing people to Jesus. I guess maybe
he didn't think there was anybody that Jesus didn't want to see. Or
there was anything Jesus couldn't respond to, or there was any
problem Jesus couldn't solve. Because he's characterized as the one
who brought men to Christ.
Now in these three incidents, if I can just sort of draw some
pictures for you, in these three incidents several things become
clear. First of all we see Andrew's openness. He knew that they were
to go to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. He knew that
primarily it was the Jew first and then to the Gentile. And yet he
also got the spirit of our Lord because the Lord originally had
revealed His Messiahship to a half-breed Samaritan woman, so Andrew
was never choked by a hyper-Judaism. I mean, he didn't have any
problem at all with bringing some Gentiles to Jesus. So we sense a
little bit of the openness of his heart. There just wasn't anybody
outside, there wasn't anybody that he didn't think Jesus would not
want to see.
We also see his faith. He had a simple faith. I don't know what he
was thinking when he brought those five crackers and two fish with
such a huge crowd. I don't know what he was trying to do, running
around looking for whoever had a lunch. But he must have had some
kind of faith to believe that the Lord could do something with that.
After all he had seen Jesus make wine, why couldn't He make food?
A third thing we see is not only his openness and his faith but we
see his humility. I mean, he spent his whole life being known as
Simon Peter's brother.. .you can believe it. And now when he had
found the Messiah, there might have been a temptation to say -Boy,
now I'm not telling Peter. This is my chance to be somebody. But no.
ú .no he runs to get Peter knowing full well that as soon as Peter
enters the group he will run the group, because that's Peter. And
Andrew will be right back where he's always been as Simon Peter's
brother. But he thought more of the work to be done then who was in
charge. He thought more of the cause of the eternal virtue of the
Kingdom then he did of his personal and petty problems. Sad to say
but there are some people who won't play in the band unless they can
beat the big drum. James and John had that problem, didn't they? But
not Andrew. I don't find Andrew fighting about whose going to get
the glory in the Kingdom.
You see, Andrew is the picture of all those who labor quietly in
humble places. Not with eye service as men pleasers but as servants
of Christ doing the will of God from the heart. Andrew is not the
pillar like Peter, James and John, he is a humbler stone. He could
have anticipated the sentiment of the poet Christina Rossetti who
wrote: "Give me the lowest place, not that I dare ask for that
lowest place, but Thou hast died that I might live and share Thy
glory by Thy side. Give me the lowest place or if for me the lowest
place is too high, then make one more low where I may sit and see my
God and love Him so." That's Andrew. I mean, after all, he was one
of the original two called and yet he wasn't in the inner three but
it didn't seem to bother him. He was always Peter's brother.
He's one of those rare people who's willing to take second place.
One of those rare people who wants to be in support. Or one of those
rare people who doesn't mind being hidden as long as the work is
done. He is the kind of man that all leaders depend on. He's the
kind of person that everyone knows is the backbone of every
ministry. The cause of Christ is dependent, beloved, on
self-forgetting souls who are content to occupy a small sphere and
an obscure place, free from self-seeking ambition and yet he will
sit on the throne judging the tribes of Israel.
Daniel Mc Lean, a Scotsman, who has a special affection for Andrew
who has become the patron saint of Scotland, writes about his
beloved Apostle these words: "Gathering together the traces of
character found in Scripture found about Andrew we find neither the
writer of an epistle nor the founder of a church nor a leading
figure in the apostolic age but simply an intimate disciple of Jesus
Christ, ever anxious that others should know the spring of spiritual
joy and share the blessing he so highly prized. A man of very
moderate endowment, who scarcely redeemed his early promise, simple
minded and sympathetic without either dramatic power or heroic
spirit. Yet he had that clinging confidence in Christ that brought
him into that inner circle of the twelve. A man with deep religious
feeling with little power of expression. He was more magnetic than
he was electric. Better suited for the quiet walks of life than the
stirring thoroughfares. Yes, Andrew is the Apostle of the private
life.
God uses people like that. And only God can calculate their value
because sometimes it takes an Andrew to reach a Peter. There's an
early Methodist preacher, and I found his biography in a very
obscure book and I know no one has ever heard of him. His name was
Thomas Mitchell. You never heard of him. I had never heard of him.
But he was an Andrew. And he died and the conference of ministers
who ministered with him wrote his obituary and this is what it said:
"Thomas Mitchell, an old soldier of Jesus Christ, a man of slender
abilities as a preacher, and who enjoyed only a very defective
education." How's that for an obituary? Slender abilities and a
defective education. And yet one friend wrote this:
"His earnest and loving work caused him to lead many people to
Christ." A man of slender abilities and defective education yet he
was the means in God's hands of bringing to Christ one of the
greatest of early preachers by the name of Thomas Olivers, the
writer of the great hymn, "The God of Abraham Praised." A man of
slender abilities? That is the official record and yet one of the
strongest and most faithful souls who ever lived.
It was he who went to the little village of Rangal in Lincoln-shire,
and arose at 5 o'clock in the mornings to preach the gospel in the
open air. And so fiery was his preaching that he was arrested. And
in the midst of his arrest a mob attacked him. He was taken to the
public house and the curate of the village was consulted as to what
to do with him. They said don't let him go and so they decided
they'd put him in the pond. They took him to a pond which was full
of filth and they threw him in. He tried to get out and seven times
they threw him back in. Then he was taken again to the public house,
having been in the meantime painted from his head to foot with white
paint. Then they didn't know what to do with him so they decided to
drown him. They dragged him to a railed in small lake outside the
village which was at least ten feet deep and they took him in their
arms and threw him into the water. He sank to the bottom and when he
came up to the surface and man in the crowd with a long pole and a
hook on the end, played with him as if he were a fish. They brought
him out more dead than alive and he was taken to a little house in
the village where he was looked after by a pious lady. But when the
mob found that he was recovering they sought him out and went to the
house and to his bedside and said they would rend him limb from limb
unless he promised never to preach again. To which he said - I can
promise no such thing.
And somehow or other he got away from the place and he made this
record of the whole incident. He wrote, "All the time God kept me in
perfect peace and I was able to pray for my enemies." It doesn't
sound like a man of slender abilities to me. No one knows about him.
No one ever heard of him. He ministered in obscurity. He was a
faithful man.
God needs Thomas Mitchells. God needs Andrews. People who quietly
obscurely bring others to Jesus.
There's a third name in the first group.. .James the son of Zebedee.
In two lists out of the four lists of the twelve he is next to
Peter. Yet we know very little about him. In fact, note this, he
never appears alive in the gospels apart from John his brother in
any incident. They're inseparable in the gospels.
Now I believe it's important to note that he's always mentioned
before John. And it probably not only indicates that he was older
but that he was the leader of this rather dynamic duo. He is the
strength. He is the zeal. He is the passion.
Now these brothers, James and John, were also fishermen and their
father was Zebedee. And Zebedee was a fairly well-to-do man because
he employed hired servants in his business. So they had a pretty
good fishing business going up there on the north shore of the Sea
of Galilee. And James fits into this first group because he was in
the early calling. John and Andrew were the first two, and certainly
James would be so close to John that he worked his way into that
intimacy.
Now as you look at the Bible in terms of incidents, James appears
more as a silhouette than a photograph. So you have to kind of get
an imagery just without all of the fullness of what might have
happened.
But I think the best way to look at James is to. .is to consider
what the Lord named him and his brother John. In Mark 3:17 Jesus
gave them a name, He called them Boanerges which means sons of
thunder.. .sons of thunder. If James is the leader, and that is
indicated by the fact that he appears first, then he was a son of
thunder. Now he must have been a passionate, zealous, fervent,
wild-eyed, ambitious, aggressive guy. To give you a classic reason
why, in Acts Herod decided to vex the church and the first guy he
went after was James and he chopped off his head. And they took
Peter and put him in jail. Which indicates that Peter was not as big
a problem as James. I mean, when you capture James and Peter and
kill James and let Peter live, that says something about the kind of
man James must have been. Strong man.. .zealous man, he was perhaps
the New Testament counterpart of Jehu who said come see my zeal for
the Lord and then uprooted the house of Ahab and swept all the Baal
worshippers out of the land. This guy made enemies fast, fourteen
years he was dead. I mean, he was the first disciple to be martyred.
They got rid of him quick. He was a real problem, thunderous
individual.
And he must have had his zeal fed daily by the one who said the zeal
of thine house has eaten me up. I mean, I can just see him when the
Lord takes out a whip, you know, do it, Lord.. .do it, you know.
Give it to him. Just zealous, you know.
Zeal is a great virtue. You love someone who is aggressive and
whose.., and whose charged up and who wants to get the job done but
very often coming along with zeal comes a lack of wisdom. And
sometimes you're shooting off your mouth and your guns are blazing
before you've really thought the thing through. You say - Can God
use somebody like that? Well yes, He did as a matter of fact.
Several incidents stand out and I'll show you where James is
mentioned and the way he acts. Luke 9. . .Luke 9 verse 51: "It came
to pass when the time was come that Jesus should be received up,"
it's time to move toward the Passion Week, "he set his face to go to
Jerusalem. And sent messengers before his face." The messengers are
going now into Samaria to prepare the way, "And they entered into a
village of Samaria to make ready for him." They wanted the
Samaritans to hear the message, Christ was coming, the Messiah was
coming. "And they didn't receive him because his face was as though
he would go to Jerusalem."
Listen, Samaritans just hated the Jews and Jerusalem. They had their
own place of worship, Mount Gerizim. They probably chased these
messengers out with curses and stones. They probably threw stones at
them. And so the messengers come back and say they're not going to
receive You in such and such a village. And then verse 54 we meet
the sons of thunder: "And when His disciples James and John saw
that, they said, Lord, wilt Thou that we command fire to come down
from heaven and consume them, yen as Elijah did." Lord, let's just
burn them up, burn them up. Great missionary heart. Just get all the
unsaved and consume them Lord, just like Elijah did.
You see, you can identify with who James' heroes were.
"And so Jesus turned and rebuked them and said, You don't know what
manner of spirit you have." This is not the spirit for now, Elijah's
spirit does not apply now, this is not a time for judgment on an
ungodly heretical nation, this is time for the proclamation of a new
covenant. You're out of sync, guys. I mean, your basic character is
leaking through.. .burn them up... that isn't the idea. "For the Son
of man isn't come to destroy men's lives but to save them. So they
just went to another village."
Jesus rebuked them strongly, they were hateful, they were
intolerant. James had so much zeal and so little sensitivity. I
mean, what kind of an evangelist would he make? And yet I have to
admit there's a touch of nobility in it. I'm glad that he got mad
when the Lord was dishonored. I would hate to have seen him pass
without a reaction at all. He was zealous. He was explosive. He was
fervent. He was passionate. I mean, he didn't just sit and watch it
happen.
Look at another incident in Matthew vs.20. Very often zealous people
are also ambitious people, they're very goal oriented, very task
oriented. And so this is the incident that we looked at in reference
to the disciples in general a couple of weeks ago, but just a
reminder. "Then came to Him the mother of Zebedee's children with
her sons," and they're dragging along on her skirt tails, and they
wanted some.. .they and.. . "And so she says to the Lord, Grant that
these my two sons may sit, the one on the right hand the other on
the left, in Thy Kingdom." Would You put my boys on the two thrones
next to You? I mean, the implication is...it's obvious to You that
they're the cream of the crop, isn't it? A mother, right? My
children are gifted. Isn't it apparent? I mean, we can see it,
Zebedee and I. I mean, and they're the ones that have the zeal. You
say - What about Peter? Listen, Peter had a lot of zeal but .. .he
also had some problems. I mean, he would deny and bail out. James
didn't seem to have that same problem. Peter faltered here and there
but it seems as though James was just resolute, he just... I mean,
he was dead in fourteen years. I mean,...they got rid of him fast.
He didn't knuckle under at all. He didn't equivocate. He didn't
compromise. And, boy, he could see his ambition - I'm going all the
way for the Kingdom, man, and not only to the Kingdom but right to
the right hand.
"And Jesus said, You don't even know what you're asking. Can you
drink the cup that I'm going to drink?" Oh, sure we can. All right,
you will. And verse 24, the fever pitch was reached and the argument
over who was going to get what in the Kingdom, they all started
arguing. And Jesus went into a little lecture on what real
leadership is.
But they were ambitious. James was ambitious. This is a terrible
thing for them to do.. .to arouse the spirit of rivalry, to clamor
for honor from the Lord. These who were the persecutors of the
Samaritans are now ambitious, self-seeking, place hunters, stalking
the favor of the Lord as if He were some despotic ruler who could
dispense his patronage on some kind of principle of favoritism. They
were demeaning Christ and His Kingdom.
Well, James had zeal, he had great fervor and he knew the Lord's
special interest in him, he was in the inside group. He felt he
ought to have an equal reward for all of his capability. And the
Lord reminded him, you'll get a reward, James, but it won't be what
you think. Before you get your throne you're going to get a cup and
your going to drink it all the way. And the cup is suffering because
the way to the throne is always the way of the cross. And James, as
I said, fourteen years later got his request. He wanted a crown,
Jesus gave him a cup. He wanted power, Jesus gave him servanthood.
He wanted to rule, Jesus gave him a martyr's grave.
Look at the one incident in the Bible where he appears alone, Acts
12. "Now about that time Herod the king stretched forth his hands to
vex certain of the church." And when Herod wanted to attack the
church he went right for the main guy, "And he killed James the
brother of John with the sword." That's who you go for first.. .and
he put Peter in prison. And apparently he didn't even think about
Peter until he was told that it would please the Jews if he did
that. It was James he was after.. .the son of thunder. He was filled
with zeal. He was filled with ambition. He was filled with strong
and intolerant feelings. He didn't like things outside his own
sympathy and Christ had to harness all of that and make all of that
into something useful and make him a pillar in the church. What kind
of people does God use? Well, He uses the great leaders like Peter.
He uses the quiet, behind-the-scenes, obscure, faithful people like
Andrew. And He also can use the brash, courageous, ambitious,
zealous, sometimes loveless, insensitive selfish people like James.
Cause Christ brought his temper under control. He bridled his
tongue. He directed his zeal. And He taught him to seek no revenge
and to desire no honor for himself.
And it finally came to the place where James was willing to die for
Jesus. So, both the brothers drank the cup. For John the cup was a
long life of rejection and a death in exile. For James it was a
short flame and martyrdom.
The Romans had a coin years ago and on the coin was an ox. And the
ox was facing an altar and a plow. And under the ox it said, "Ready
for either." And that's how it is in service for Christ and that's
how it was for the sons of thunder. There is the moment dramatic
sacrifice on the altar, that was James. And there is the long furrow
of the plow, that was John. But both of them drank the cup.
James had to learn sensitivity. He had to learn to quiet his
ambition, but he did and God used him. You know, a lack of
sensitivity can just destroy a ministry. There are many people who
try to serve Christ who are utterly insensitive to their
congregations, to their families, to the people around them. One
such man was a Norwegian pastor. His story is very interesting.
He had a motto, his motto was "All or nothing.".. .All or nothing.
And he went around preaching and hurling out lightnings and
screaming thunders on everybody. He was stern and strong and
powerful and compromising and insensitive. I mean, they said that
his people in the church didn't even care for him because he didn't
care for them. He was so ambitious. He wanted to advance the
Kingdom. He wanted to uphold the standard of God. And he was just
blind to anybody else. It came down to his own family. And he had a
little girl, just a little tiny girl who was ill. And the doctor
said you must take her out of the Norwegian cold where she can come
to a warmer climate so she can regain her strength or she will die.
To which he answered, "All or nothing." And stayed. And she died.
And when she died, the mother was so distraught and so shattered,
she found no love in her husband but had doted all of her love on
this little life that she would sit for hours in a chair holding the
clothes of the little baby, and fondling them feeding her starved
heart on those empty garments.
This didn't go on for many days until her husband took them all out
of her hand and gave them to a poor woman in the street. But his
wife had tucked underneath her a little bonnet which she kept as the
last vestige of a memory. He found that and gave that away too, and
gave her a speech on all or nothing. And in months she died of
grief.
What stupid insensitivity. That kind of thing unmellowed his only
tragic. You can be insensitive to the people around you in a tragic
way. I think of Billy Sunday the great evangelist, all of his
children died in unbelief.. .all of them. Utterly insensitive to the
ones around him while he was winning the world. There are many
pastors and evangelists and Christian people who aren't even
listening to what's going on in their own house and the people
around them, who are so oriented to task that they miss the people.
Zeal with insensitivity is so cruel. And James had to be refined. I
mean, he had to get from the place where he said - Just burn them
up, Lord, if they don't cooperate, burn them up. - to the place
where he cared.
Now if you're going to ask me.. .you're going to force me to the
corner and ask me to choose, I'll take a man of a flaming, burning
intolerant passionate enthusiasm with a potential for failure rather
than a cold, compromising, milquetoast about which his brother John
said - God would spew him out of His mouth... Give me a fiery heart,
give me a flaming heart because those people will set the world on
fire, but give me one with sensitivity.
What kind of men does God use? What kind of women does God use? What
kind of people fit into the plan? Dynamic people like Peter, leaders
who can get everybody to do it. Humble people like Andrew who just
do it quietly behind the scenes. And James who don't really need
other people to do it, they just do it with zeal and passion.
You say - You mean the Lord can use all those kinds of people? You
don't have to be born with a halo? You don't have to be on a stain
glass? You can just be a person person? Yes, these are very common
people because He can transform all of those things.
Finally, the last individual, and we're not going to spend much time
on him, we'll see him.. .he intersects the story throughout the New
Testament because of the fact that he wrote the gospel of John,
First, Second and Third John and Revelation. But I want to have you
at least briefly meet John, his brother, James' brother.
Now may I hasten to add, we think about John, we think about some
meek, mild, pale-skinned, effeminate guy lying around with his head
on Jesus' shoulder... .sort of looking up with a dove-eyed stare,
with little skinny arms, you know. And you've missed it, folks, if
that's what you think. He was in all those incidents about James
that I just read you. And he was one of the sons of thunder. He was
intolerant - burn them up, Lord - he was ambitious -I want the seat
on your right and left - he was zealous, he was explosive. But I
think not quite as much as James. James seems to be the prominent
one and John does seem to have a side to him. I mean, at least John
lasted. He lived to.. .till nearly the year 100. He outlived
everybody. He was explosive too.
Now it's interesting to note that the only time he appears alone by
name, you know what he's doing? He's mad at somebody. That's right,
. . .John. Whose he mad at? Some guy who was casting out demons...
in Mark 9. Why was he mad? He said to Jesus, he said: "There is a
man casting out demons and he's not in our group." He's not in our
group. "I.. .I forbade him to do that." I told him - Listen, fella,
cool it. You're not in our group. He was sectarian. I mean, he was
narrow- minded.
A couple of weeks ago a series was done in a school in our country.
And the title of the series was "The heresy of MacArthurism." And so
I found out about this and I asked somebody - What is the heresy?
And.., and they said - Well, they asked the source involved and they
said that it was that you're not a member of their group, therefore
you must be wrong. And that was the bottom line. Well, that's a
strange view. They should read Mark 9.. .9:39 and 40 and John says -
Lord, I told them to be quiet because he wasn't in our group. Now
wait a minute, that's unbending, that's narrow, that is ridiculous
intolerance. Well, that was John.
But you know something? That became a strength in his character.
Because he also had a tremendous capacity `for love. And you show me
a man who has a great capacity for love and no sense of the truth
and no limits and no guidelines and no strong convictions and I'll
show you a disaster of tolerance and sentimentality. So, God knew
that the greatest source of truth in the New Testament, as far as a
human author is concerned, about love would have to be a man who was
also strong and uncompromising or his love would take him down the
road of sentimentalism. And if he was to speak the truth in love, he
had to be as much committed to the truth as he was to love. And so
you find two things that stand out in John's life.. .the word love
and the word witness.
Eighty times he uses the word love. Seventy some times the word
witness in one form or another. He was always the witness to the
truth and always the teacher of love. And so, he is the
personification of speaking the truth in love. It's so good that his
love was controlled by his witness, by his truth. He was a truth
seeker. He wanted to know the truth. He was a discoverer. He was a
visionary. He it was who first recognized the Lord at the lakeside
of Galilee. He it was to whom God revealed the future in the
apocalypse. He was the seer, the visionary, the truth seeker. The
reason he was hanging around Christ's breast was not some kind of
sloppy, sickening sentimentalism, what it was was his heart
literally hungered for the truth as well as the deep affection for
Christ. He wanted to gather every word that came out of his Lord's
lips as well as bask in the light of His love.
So, he became a lover but a lover whose love was controlled by the
truth. And that control was born out of that tremendous zeal he had
in his personality, that passion, that strength, that fiery
character. And in case you don't think he is, you try reading First,
Second and Third John and see how he denounces those who are
antichrist, and those who will stand up in church... in the church
to twist and pervert.. .he's firm, he's strong. You read the gospel
of John and see how he sets the people of God against the people of
Satan.. .the redeemed against the lost. How he talks about the
judgment of the righteous and the unrighteous. The man knew where
the lines were drawn and his love is never sentimentalism.
But he is characterized by love. You just don't see much about him
in the other gospels unless it's with James, as I showed you, or in
the list of the group. But where he emerges is in his own gospel and
he appears in his own gospel several times, always the same way.
How? Listen, John 13:23: "Now there was leaning on Jesus' bosom one
of His disciples, whom Jesus loved." Whom Jesus loved, the disciple
that Jesus loved, that's John. He never uses His name. He calls
himself the disciple whom Jesus loved.
Now listen, the man had a heart of love and a man who has a heart of
love understands love and has a great capacity to give and receive
love. People who can love greatly can be loved greatly because they
understand. And John literally took in the love of Christ and gave
out the love of Christ, so he called himself the disciple whom Jesus
loved. That's the only thing he ever called him.
In the nineteenth chapter and the 26th verse, he appears again.
"Jesus saw His mother and the disciple standing by, whom He loved."
Same disciple whom Jesus loved.
Chapter 20 verse 2: "Then runs and comes to Simon Peter," Mary
Magdalene does, "and to the other disciple, whom Jesus loved."
Chapter 21 verse 7, same thing: "Therefore the disciple, whom Jesus
loved, said to Peter."
Verse 20: "Peter turning about sees the disciple, whom Jesus loved."
Verse 24: "This is the disciple who testifies these things."
It is the disciple, whom Jesus loved, that wrote the gospel of John,
that's what he says. He literally was in awe that Jesus loved him.
And it wasn't a sickly sentimentalism, it wasn't that he said - Oh,
I'm so wonderful, the Lord loves me so much, I just want you to know
I'm the disciple He loved. No, no, no. It was the very opposite - I,
the one who wanted to burn up all the Samaritans... I the one who
wanted Jesus to give me the place I didn't even deserve.. .I am one
whom He loves. It's a celebration of grace.
Jesus never had to ask John if he loved Him, but He did have to ask
Peter that. Jesus never had to ask John to follow Him, but He did
have to ask Peter that. And when it came down to passing out the
work, He said to Peter - Feed My sheep. He said to John -Take care
of My mother. There was something special about John.
Tradition tells us that John never left the city of Jerusalem until
Mary the mother of Jesus died, because he kept his vow to the Lord.
So, John was a son of thunder but he was a tender-loving man who
would never compromise his convictions. He taught on love. You can
summarize the theology of John about love into ten statements. He
taught that God is a God of love. He taught that God loved His Son,
that God loved the disciples, that God loves all men, that God is
loved by Christ, that Christ loved the disciples in general, that
Christ loved individuals, that Christ expected all men to love Him,
that Christ taught that we should love one another and that Christ
emphasized that love is the fulfilling of the whole law. And those
themes run through all his writings.
And you can also see the truth there too. You hear the word witness
again and again and again and again as he affirms the witness, the
witness, the witness of the truth. He speaks of the witness of John
the Baptist, the witness of the Scripture, the witness of the
Father, the witness of Christ, the witness of the miracles, the
witness of the Holy Spirit and the witness of the Apostles. Always
speaking truth...speaking truth in love.
And so, the Lord can use that kind of man. The man with a great
love. There are the James who just live their life on passion, zeal,
fervor, fire, sparks flying everywhere. And there are the Johns who
can harness the truth in love. And they'll last and attract people
to Christ. And God uses all kinds.. .a fiery lover whose love was a
passionate devotion to the truth. He lived to be an old man but he
was always the son of thunder.
Let me close with this. So what kind of people does He use? What
kind of people does He draw into intimacy with Him? Who are these
stained glass saints? What do you have to be to get really close to
Jesus? Think of this now.. .when God came into the world and walked
in this world, God the God of the universe, the living eternal
almighty holy God, when He walked in this world, He picked out four
people to be close to Him... four men to be close to Him.. .four men
to be His intimates.
One was dynamic, strong, bold, a leader like Peter, who took charge,
who initiated, who planned, who strategized, who confronted, who
commanded people to Christ. And very often blew it.
Another was humble, gentle, inconspicuous, Andrew who didn't see the
crowds but saw the individuals in the crowds. And while he never
attracted a mob he kept bringing people to Jesus.
And then He picked a man who was zealous, passionate,
uncompromising, insensitive at first, ambitious, who could see a
goal and go for it with all his might and die in the
process...James.
And then there was sensitive, loving, believing, intimate John,
every bit a truth seeker. Who spoke the truth in love so that he
attracted people to himself.
And He made them into fishers of men in spite of what they were.
Peter was finally crucified upside down by his own request while
unwavering in his faith in Christ. Andrew, tradition tells us that
Andrew had the privilege of preaching in a province and the
governor’s wife received Jesus Christ as her Savior and the governor
was so upset that he demanded that his wife reject Christ and when
she wouldn't he crucified Andrew. Tradition says he crucified him on
an X that's why X is the symbol of Andrew. An X-shaped cross and the
traditional history tells us that he was on that cross for two days
and as he hung alive for all those two days, he preached without
ceasing the gospel of Christ in the midst of his agony. Still trying
to bring people to Jesus.
Tradition tells us that James, when he was on a way to being
beheaded by the Roman sword, had along the guard who had guarded him
and the guard was so impressed with his courage and constancy and
zeal that he repented of his sin and fell down at the Apostle's feet
and asked if the Apostle would forgive him for the part he had
played in the rough treatment James received. At which point James
lifted the man up, embraced him kissed him and said - Peace, my son,
peace to thee and the pardon of thy faults. And tradition says
immediately the officer publicly confessed his surrender to Christ
and was therefore beheaded along side James.
John, banished to the isle of Patmos after a long life, died around
98 A.D. during the reign of Trajan. And those who knew him best said
the echo of a constant phrase was their reminder of John. And this
was the phrase: "My little children, love one another." and
weaknesses of men like us. Yet in the power of Christ they were
transformed. What kind of people does God use? Any kind. Listen to
this now, it is not what you are, it is what you are willing to
become that is the issue. See? The fishermen of Galilee did become
fishers of men on a most extensive scale, and by the help of God
they gathered many souls into the church. In a sense, they're
casting their nets into the sea of the world still. And by the
testimony to Jesus they gave in the gospel and the epistles, they
are bringing multitudes to become disciples of Him among whose first
followers they had the happy privilege to be numbered.
Listen, Christ can take a very common person and make them a very
uncommon Apostle. Are you available for that? Shall we pray?
Thank You, Father, for a Andrew, James and John. How they were
willing to become. us hope that You can make us We pray, Lord, that
we might Christ's name and His glory. glimpse of these dear men;
Peter, special.. .not what they were but what We see ourselves in
them and it gives what You want us to be and use us. be available to
be discipled... in Amen.
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